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tv   News  RT  June 11, 2021 1:00pm-1:31pm EDT

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[000:00:00;00] the the group of 7 leaders meet for the 1st time since this starts of the pub demik with vaccines on climate change, high on the agenda. but there's also a focus on russia and china. the do feel a deep sense of the 12. we have young police officers who by age alone will not be vaccinated. how can not be want? you can police chiefs raise the alarm over a lack of vaccinations for the force. i made the $5.00 and on job officers at the g . 7 summit could become coded super spreaders. and in new york, parents declare war on the walk in doctrine nation of school,
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it's putting up billboards, demanding their children instead, be taught for themselves up by diversity. ah, a warm welcome to our international. my name's you. don't know you on 30 minutes of news and views starting on the 1st g 7 in person summit since the start of the pandemic is underway inside the west england. it also marks du biden's 1st overseas trip during his presidency ahead of the summits. biden met with the host u. k. prime minister boris johnson. they signed a new blunt to charter based on a 1941 agreement that outlined the 2 countries goes after world war 2. the priority note, according to the document, is cooperation. as for the g 7 event itself,
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the main talking points of the panoramic trades and climb change plus china and russia rock sd of examines why much of mouth agenda is a blast from the past. america is back. back for watson. when did it ever leave? whatever it is that it's coming back to from as unclear. at every point along the way, we're going to make it clear that united states is back. and democracies of the world are standing together to tackle the toughest challenges and the issues that matter most to our future. well, that's good. certainly, again, i can't remember them ever leaving, but if you will, coming back to things you never left, then why the heck not some things you've already signed are revitalized atlantic charter building on the commitments and aspirations that of 80 years ago. the firms are ongoing commitment to sustaining our enduring values and defending them against
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new and old challenges. so they're defending democracy, defending nate, who, defending trade, which american britain have done admirably. if a tad violently but that's the rule, they will now chic to combat cyber threats. climate change and the pandemic, there's so much to do and what better way to start than with dukes. so the prime minister, we are both very i'm not sure i'm going to send from that. i'm going to disagree or lead or anything else. perhaps what may be construed as new is that button seems hell bent and we're turning it's all to the glory days of the cold war. and has, you've been clear the united states will respond in a robust and meaningful way the russian government engages and harmful activities. we've already demonstrated that except we've had the same thing in various forms
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for non century trump said the same things. so what did they mean? what is it that they say? if it isn't russia, it's yes, china, they can't say it out loud. no one, ready yet, but it's there between the lines. we will focus on ensuring the market democracies, not china, or anyone else. right? the 21st century rules around trade and technology, and we will continue to pursue the goal of a europe whole free and at peace. biden. once the resurrection, i know monster, the cold war with vos, standing armies with vos military spending a vase block to crush the competition. and the competition. and he's in russia. the competition is china, which america still doesn't have an answer for. murat gas, the if will ahead of the g 7 some if the chairman of the u. s. joint chiefs of
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stuff singled by china and russia as the biggest global threats. but daniel mcadams, who's executive director at the ron paul piece institute, said they're just inventing another enemy. but i wonder if i fallen asleep in waking up when woken up in 1978 or something. you know, it's, it's, it's unbelievable that we need to sign a new atlantic lines. what is the atlantic? we have no idea what the atlantic is. the atlantic has been certainly since the end of the cold war, european countries incapable of developing their own independence, foreign and domestic and economic policy, basically blindly following the united states into places like afghanistan and syria and libya and miss adventure after misadventure. china is the big enemy of the defense secretary austin said, we have to start acting like china is the and the mean, not just thinking like they're the enemy and this is how it works. this is how the u. s. military industrial complex works. you invented in me words the global war on terrorism, or the global fight against co, good,
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or the global fight against china. you invent these bogey men, and then you spend hundreds and hundreds of billions and trillions of dollars that go into the pockets of well connected companies. well connected, think tanks in the washington beltway, and that's what keeps the machine going with the machine is going to end because the american economy is about to collapse. it's teetering on the edge of collapse on day one of the g 7 summit in cornwall leaders pledge to donate hundreds of millions of vaccine doses to per nations. but in the host nation itself, police have warned of a more immediate problem that 5000 of the officers of the event haven't been inoculated, thought the house, and stopped the u. k. prime minister from praising the force for its work during the pandemic. i bet the policing restrictions in that way was not something you ever dreamt you will be doing. but you did it because you knew it was how we were going to protect the n h. s. and saved lives for something that speaking out the
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police federation, annual conference abilene named policing on the pressure of those within the 4th. a claim that he and home secretary principal sell them on the front line during a pandemic. totally unprotected. the government, small words became lame actions and the result is my colleagues do feel a sense, a deep sense of betrayal. just this week we have thousands of colleagues from all over the country, coming together to replace the g 7 summit to homo police officers from those very communities where the indian variance of the virus is thriving. we have young police officers who by age alone, will not have been vaccinated. how can not be ranked $6500.00 offices from every police force in the country? a part of the g 7 rings of steel and that dealing with diplomat small over the world. meaning the summit could become a hot bed of covey, with offices acting as potential super spreaders. certainly an issue that needs to be considered whether or not there's any risk of
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a super spread. talked event occurring around the g 7. so there are people from all over the world. they include people from countries where the rights of covey to very different from allison, with various different versions of a virus causing the problems. last year that were 89 police officer, dec involving cove it highlighting why police representative are so eager for their members to get their jobs if they're going to continue to put themselves at risk front line officers on the so. so things tend to be the young end of the scale, certainly in large numbers, and therefore they will not yet have reached the point where they will all be vaccinated with the g 7 operation. now, the way there are fears and some courses that the damage has already been done and it leaves government officials hoping that the summit doesn't result in a surgeon code the cases. and particularly among those they've saw protecting some
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of the world's most powerful people. east ali, off the u. k. london. well, the lack of police vaccinations isn't the only pandemic related criticism being laid at the british government store. u. k. health st. khatri martin cock has been branded, quote, a liar trying to rewrite history by the opposition labor party deputy leader. it's after he denied a nationwide shortage of personal protective equipment last year while speaking, before a parliamentary inquiry into the covered crisis. i don't deny it all the, with the challenges in individual areas, there was never a national shortage of p p because of the action that we took much hancock was being scrutinized over the government's handling of the 1st stages of the panoramic dining streets, dunn's alleged feeling to ensure a sufficient stockpiles of p p at hospitals endangering the lives of n h s stuff. some health workers were even photograph making their own guns out of bin bags. the government is also accused of chaotic. p. p. e. procurements that
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cause billions extra to the state budget. however, the authorities defend their covert policies. the chairperson of the u. k. doctors association told this there is no far greater distress than the images. i think it's very hard for me to have trust in my uncle if in the same breath need also denies the fact that they will problems with getting to the front line and other p p. 's. adequate. that actually doesn't seem to have been responsible for many at the death and the fact that he also says that he values and just off and he recognizes they've made know in many cases the ultimate sacrifice. but he's part of the government, which is recommended to one's not moving to one percent pay or something that's where the u. k. governments. cobit policies have repeatedly drawn criticism from the labor party, one of its members to list a health ministers just trying to mask feel years during the pandemic. whether it's
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inaction or incompetent to the government policy throughout this damage because directly contributed to tens of thousands of deaths, one of the worst death tolls in the world. and in the face of all this might, hancock is, is all out there in front of that committee. acting like a schoolboy whose dog has eaten his homework and he's blaming scientific blaming the public isn't anything but take responsibility for for, for this himself. he's saying of p p. he's saying that the say no evidence to the lack of p, p 4 for an a chest off, directly contributed to death. it was coming out with advice and information, saying that there was no evidence that ma squaring prevented. covered cases. you have to ask you, so why would they coming out saying things that were so patiently wrong at the time is because they didn't have the p b for the public to another headline. stories very angry parents in new york have
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lashed out elite schools in the city for allegedly indoctrinating their children with walk values instead of teaching them how to think ortiz kill up mom and house the story. it looks like some parents are fed up with critical race theory being taught in school. mobile billboards have been set up outside of new york city, private schools, where parents are calling out the woke curriculum, taught on their money. the truck sign says, teach how to think. not what to think. woke school speak out and diversity not indoctrination. this campaign was organized by a group of parents who say they are concerned about what their children are being taught. in recent years, a new orthodoxy has emerged to tell us cause dividing our communities based and immutable characteristics such as race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation. as a result of the core tennis of high quality education, unite and all children and families through love and appreciation for learning and
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community spirit have gone by the wayside. schools should unite us not divide us. many of these parents say they are not opposed to an anti racist or pro diversity curriculum, but they say critical race theory is going a bit too far and causing more problems than it solves. we are a group of concerned parents who believe there is a better way to promote diversity and include a teacher at lead and independent schools in new york city without sacrificing quality education for all students. to save our schools, administrators must ensure academic rigor and intellectual integrity requirements of any core curriculum. while the respect and parents, as the primary moral educators of the children, parents aren't the only ones. there's an english teacher in new jersey at a private school who quit her job saying that critical race theory is racist. time resigning from a job that i love. over the past few years, the school has embrace and ideology that is damaging to our students, intellectual and emotional growth and ideology that require students to see themselves not as individuals,
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but as representatives of either an oppressor or oppressed group and by professional opinion as an educator the school is failing to encourage healthy habits of mind, essential for growth, a growing number of parents and teachers objects to the teaching of critical race theory in school. this is yet another conflict and a time of already deep divisions in the united states of america. well, how will this all ultimately be resolved? well, it looks like it will be up to our children to settle this. i actually think that critical race theory would be allowed in our schools to teach or shared any teach him at home and not in the school. there is no need for that is what is doing is teaching kids how to have them felt what control is out of place has no place in fact at all. and in order to change we got about lynn. i was with teachers teach
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this particular correctly go back to the base keisha banners that we had before. and i was we want to change the situation. we must fight hard and we must do it from our home. that was our church to the way that we think we need to do it . and so at this particular point, we have got the points back and pushed back car case thing, state side, america's multi trillion dollar pandemic. stimulus along with low borrowing rates or a toxic combination that could upset the entire global economy. is the stark warning from deutsche bank researchers who say the federal reserve is setting off uninstall . missionary spiral. the most basic laws of economics, the ones that have stood the test of time over a millennium have not been suspended. an explosive growth in debts finance largely by central banks, is likely to lead to higher inflation rise and prices will touch every one. the effects could be devastating,
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particularly for the most falling bill in society. monetary seamless has been equally breathtaking. looking at the figures, the by the administration pass the 2 trillion dollar stimulus package back in march . that is, however, just part of the 5 trillion that's been pumped into the economy since the start of the panoramic. it sent the national debt soaring to more than $28.00 trillion dollars. and while the economies awash with borrowed money, prices are going up u. s. inflation hit 5 percent and may the highest since 2008 for them to live, to welcome onto the program. and jeffrey albert tucker, who is editorial director of the american institute for economic research. welcome to you. start wanting to indeed from deutsche bank about the u. s. stimulus. and the knock on effect that could have are their concerns justified chris, here as an american, i'm deeply embarrassed of what the country is done for the last year and a half. i mean, it was locked down lockdown locked downs,
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then it was stimulus and printing and spending and the level of economic folly that's taking place right now. just really amounts to a kind of economic suicide as if the ruling class in the united states today has as no conception of economic law or reality and at all. and you know, the fact that cpi numbers came out was 5 percent. i mean, those are in the past 2, it's probably closer, 6 or 7 is definitely double digit manufacturer of actually it's over 20 percent and manufacturers and people come up there excuses like oh, that's because of the chip shorter. and that's because of the lumber shorter. those because of weather. now, this is just the inevitable effects of agreed to seek out my policy. that acts as a reality doesn't matter. the researchers aren't putting their punches either on the subject of inflation. they warn the effects could be devastating, particularly for the,
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the most vulnerable in society. so it's not all month the per getting per and the rich richer again is that the outcome here in 2020 low age employee and employees last 23 percent of the value of their income string. the rich gained 3 percent. right. so that tells you the truth about a lockdown, so that it, a 3rd of small businesses basically went out of business. this is the latest data. the carnage was, was everywhere. and the federal reserve and the u. s. congress with the presidency have tried to make up for this catastrophe with spending and, and printing, which is no substitute for actual wealth creation. so everything we're seeing around us right now, and it's very serious, is the inevitable results of that. and what's extra new to me is that right now, everybody's trying to put the best face on it, right? so you've got the federal reserve saying, this isn't
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a big deal. everything is going to be fine. you know, baby, i'm actually extremely doubtful. maybe economic law's been repealed, you know, maybe there's somebody else. but once the velocity of spending changes, we can see this thing get out of hand really fast. and the federal reserve is pretends to believe they can control this will be completely lost. even somebody like me, he doesn't trust the numbers as well. as you can see, just the real starkness here at the u. s. national debt is growing by the fastest rate in history and up 5 trillion in the past 14 months to 28 trillion. at what point does this become unsustainable or beyond repair? so i think what you have here there's, there's no way to think about this crisis and it is crisis without understand the politics of it. so i think what's happening is we have one party state in the us today, 11 party rolls the, the house, the senate, and the, and the white house. they believe that have 18 months. that's it. to do everything
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they want to do. so they don't care, they're not thinking about the future. the only thing about they just have a bunch of maddox in charge and they're just printing and spending and taxing as wildly if they can, because they believe they're going to be kicked out of office in 18 months. they want to have as much fun as they want to right now, but but you know, the problem is to lag, you know, this is always what comes back to bite economic policy and the lag glass to embed from 6 months to, to 18 months. and i'm very, very worried what the countries gonna look like and 18 months. i think there's probably dramatic political upheaval coming. americans have inflation now in the old days in the seventy's when we had the stuff, we had protests on the street. i think we're going to see that again, it's going to get worse. and the people who did this to us are going to go down and discredit. i believe this is the government. is it sufficiently vigilant and
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ensuring the stimulus funds are being well spent to you ask that question, but i think you know the answer. the answer is no. there are a lot of funds spent and 2020 for p p. p loans that sustain small business to and locked downs. and i understand of and it makes sense to some extent. but ms. new is spending bills are ridiculous. nobody reads them, they're all pork. there's a mass challenging going on in the united states. i'm sorry to say, but it's just true. all fiscal accountability monetary rationality seems to have left the country and nobody knows what to do about it. in fact, nobody can do anything about it for another 18 months, because that's when the elections take place, which is why the democrats are so focused on election reform right now because they don't want to political revolution happened. but these look, these are sad times it's, it's that for me because but i'm seen as
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a nation commit economic suicide, it's going to have long term effects. i mean, again, you know, i might be wrong about this, but i think the u. s. is in a similar position that britain was on the cusp of world war one, losing its empire, losing its prosperity, losing its footing in the world, and it was displaced. so what's going to displace us today? well, i think everybody knows, answered that and, and it's very tragic and very sad just to sum up succinctly sellers to every well. but with the democrats in control of both sides of congress is the pattern of vast borrowing b lights. that's the only foreseeable from the 15 months you believe. yeah, i don't department, they don't have any other model in mind. they're really the governing the u. s. the way britishness government rush, i'm sorry. say it's. it's a model of command and control. they don't believe in basic tenets of freedom or
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economic rationality. and this law, they know they know they know how to spend money and then know how to print money. and that's it. you know, the old americans to establishment that was more or less well educated. seems to have gone away. it's actually one of the most remarkable things about american politics today that, that even the old democrats, you know, that believe in fiscal responsibility built to have a voice anymore. and it's, everything's gone completely haywire. it's beyond belief and, and we're going to see the effects of it. but you know, reality eventually kepsa catches up to people. and the fantasies that they can, you know, create prosperity out of a printing press or, or, and, and by spending road generally be revealed to be complete folly. so you know what the world looks like in 5 years. i don't know. i still think there's the chance for the us, but it's going to have to take a dramatic turn around and a philosophy,
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you know, towards, away from this kind of profit, se towards responsibility. it feels a little hollow to wish you a good weekend ahead, but i will. anyway, jeffrey albert tucker, editorial director of the american institute for economic research. all was interesting to have you in the program. thank you. my pleasure. rushes, media and communications regulator has published a report detailing how social media giants are breaking the law. it follows a large scale inspection my colleagues research shades fosgate taylor, talk through the story earlier. we know that the internet is a pace. it's really hard to control, but fears are growing that it's become out of control recently lacking sufficient regulation. and because of russia media watchdog launch to review that looked into what certain especially social media platforms are or are not, as it turns out, doing to make the internet a safe place. now course in the past we've seen how often harmful content lingers
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on line unchecked. people just how the live stream of the christ church massacre circulated on facebook for hours afterwards. but the statistics from this report really expose how well negligent these platforms being, you know, we're talking about tow pornography pro drug pro suicide content terrace material, and i'm talking thousands and thousands of incidence. there is so much, but just as an example for 6 years, twitter kept up $6000.00 posts of that kind. see me taking no regulatory steps and even when it did, it moved at a glacial pace. facebook, for example, on average to $105.00 days to remove these kinds of posts. in the meantime, you, of course, have under age vulnerable people exposed to all of this back in march. actually, russia's media watchdog warned twitter of a total ban unless it got this illegal content under control. and as a warning step, it actually slowed the site's traffic which ultimately pushed it to remove
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a lot of, but not all of the content. there are 2 hundreds of post op simply, it's imposed financial penalties, including, for example, 23000000 rouble fine for twitter, 43000000 facebook. so the conclusion here that's coming out is that only by punishing these platforms by threatening them with, with bonds and with financial loss is action taken, which is a terrifying fort. why on these platforms themselves incentivized to tackle illegal and harmful content. the john may be violating the law by keeping certain content up, but as i understand, the russian authorities are also riled by what's been taken down. not a well exactly. so i'm the one hand we've got twittering, co, dragging their feet when it comes to st. child pornography, but the report claims that on the other hand, when it comes to sensory content of especially russian media and of course r t, they are quick and happy to press that delete button 29 times. for example,
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by google and youtube alone. i can't count how many times i've talked about this, whether it's about youtube bonding and taking down our sister channel or t arbuckle. even my own material, you're 2 months ago. i did a life stream dedicated to 60 years since the fast pass and fluid space. i spoke to cosmo about life on the international space station. it was fun, it was homeless and it will bond with no reason given. so the review really does lay by how problematic these platforms are. all they knowingly not protecting people are they simply overwhelmed by the extent of harmful content and widely turning a blind eye to often illegal content that causes emotional and physical often fate to home. but then arbitrarily censoring content simply contributes to diversity of voices. and it's clear that russia feels that it can only see a change if it forces a change because these platforms at this stage clearly don't feel any sense of
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responsibility before they uses. just told me the story technology expert bill new thinks the social media giants are disregarding local laws in many of the countries where they operate. to large extent, these large platforms failed there, above the law they have chosen to comply with various different privacy laws in various different jurisdictions. they've also kind of thumbed on those up. some of the content restrictions realizing that the, the fines that they're being given, they can just brush off the really thing that has actually brought to the severity with which some different jurisdictions are actually growing. fed up with them. some of the bands that they faced in australia, there was a bomb, the sharing of news content that has been a threat to facebook that would be bought from sharing private data between europe and america. and now in russia and other countries, more and more jurisdictions are standing up to them saying, i'm sorry,
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you're not buying the law, you're not doing what we require in terms of content moderation. i mean barrier many areas such as some of the stuff that take down there, showing double standards well as the european football championships prepared to kick off within the next 90 minutes or so. next year's world cup posts will be looking on with interest at how a major tournament progresses in the time of cove it. apart from the pandemic, it hasn't been the smoothness of parts to guitar. 2022, but the nation is determined to impress. we've got the inside truck view. next the the
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who's ah football in the middle east. ever since the tiny golf nation was the right to house, the people world top it football national team been done as a dark floors or a capital if you will. give me one of the persian gulf wealthiest country as has spend billions of dollars on state of the art stadiums. but is it really possible to play football when it's a 30 degrees celsius outside? well,

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